L. m {54% ‘ . ‘i < .. r,“ .,,« “Away .. ‘ p _ woo-w .4 â€" x z .- .. . . "X arse fyirah ’ U \V xa‘vht,...';.- _} y ..m&-:*:“v%:f=!z‘ 4, .. - - *.."‘\. a. . wag.†, ‘ -‘~ ~%.T’- , «a .\ “flasks-er â€"’ ~._. «4» ._- . A-» _,.'_â€"~“-\,Aka.-EW~VM-“‘3,- QE’WW ,‘v‘MIVV v m ~v v ». M -. 5 A\/\ . v.‘,,m;,p.u.? I ,9 } W.ï¬v5vg~$wwm~w .» .- ,~,»-~x~.r\/\p~mv.~r_- râ€" ."mrn .. "the well water. ‘A few years ago . chards that have been set from 30 Imowing the vines. I come letters of recommendation for ito get up six to tWelve times night- ‘ medicines. ' twenty years ‘boxes of Dr. Chase's them in every feature. owner of them what that means' and leaf. and. consequently, the Tot 0f the invariable answer 'will be that the tuber, by spraying with borâ€" it is old age, when the true answer deaux. would be starvmion and neglect, The first spray should be made the The land has beenlcropped and the latter part of June, and from that crops removed from the orchards to time until the vines commence to such" an extent that the soil has beâ€" .show that they are becoming ripe, H , 1 "L , come impoverished and prunin has the bordeaux should be keit conâ€" WAIER SUPPLYOI‘ 11H“ FARM' ibeen neglected until the limbsg and Stantly upon the leaves and I vines. The water supply of the farm is ob- Ibl'anchcs have so om‘grown the mOtS .If “goes not 12am to wash it away’ tamed usually from wells. In many of the trees that the latter cannot it will be sufficient to spray once cases the source of supply is {1.0m100nvey nutriment enough to the chI‘y'two Weeks, but an extra apâ€" ‘hahow. “ens, andwith these there [former to keep them in fair growing plication should be made after a comes the danger of pollution. When [condltlon 9V0“ .lf them were now in hard, das'hmg I‘ilin.‘ This applica- the farmer hrs‘t builds his home the (the starved seil enough of it to tion will not kill the potato beetle Water supply from the' Shallow well [make an adequate top growth. 'A or other chewing insects, but, if any is pure. AS-the soil hem. the well lhealthy, prosperous life of an orâ€" Such pests be present, add about it becomes covered with litter and Chard Is not limited to ï¬fty or a third of a pound of paris green to Slops and other refuse are thrown ihundl‘ed years or more by any cach barrel of the bordeaux. This then becomes both a fungicide and out near the house, the water supâ€" ‘means- . _ . an insectICide. ply is suhjectC-d- to contamination What is the. cheapest and best meâ€" flhOl'O and more as each succeedingithod 0? keepmg the Son Of an 01“ # year adds to the material absorbed Wham! “1 9“ 300d State Of fertility? by the soil. writes Proh J_ B. Weenh I] claim there is no better or cheaper SAVE BABY’S LIFE- Ultiniafoly the soil is saturated i‘i’letgo‘lp if?!†;‘s}1°°pi"gntgtiltllat “"‘ and the rain as it falls to .he sur- 5' y "l urmg Sleep upon ‘3 and- 7 l ' face of the ground seeks tltie water If 0‘18 has more Sheep than the are“ tobogafgfilll‘yt yiiir 11htctiltc level and carries with it decayed or the orchfuid.wm maintain' have a ther ‘ At this timegsickgess. colt? vegetable and animal matter which pasture adlomlng it†.being Sure to swiftly and the snnds of l‘ittlls may be present in the soil throughijlose the Sheep m the ordmrd life are apt to; lid v' 'l. t}, e which the water passes_ In many nights so that the most of their fora“ . ‘1' st e ay a mos. be- instances the well which furnishes amppmgs will be left them to fer“ 1 L 3,911: 1‘13“: ; I ysentvry' man- the water supply of the family and tilize the 5011. The leaves of the tlocal’lc 0 61ft m Emu-m} an'i Stomach is used to Wash the milk utensils is treeswill assume greener color, will Ciro}? es “‘9 alarmingly frequent situated near. the barnyard. Under mmam .011 13118 trees mUCh later and 'u1 ng the hOt Weather. At the ï¬rm: certain conditions the well mav have ltlie fruit Will be larger, will color Sign of any of these troubles Baby’s been placed so that the drainage of be.tter am! every. feature Of the 01" Own Tablets §houm be leenâ€"better the barnyard runs directly into the chard Will evmce greater thrift. Stlu an occa510nal.dose W111 Prevent we“. It Can cashv be seen that the warm, sunny days in summer the these troubles coming, and the Tab- water containing these impurities Sheep WI11 Test in the Shade 0" the 10/“ Sho‘lld therefore be kept in ever-V may be unhealthy for two reasons: lapplc trees’ and. Opcoum?’ Wm leave ho.me.' Promptness may save your It may sen-e h's a, carrier of- the imuch of their droppings exactly Chllds Ulc- MI‘S- _J- R. Standen. germ of diseases which. may be presâ€" EWhere they will do the m0†g°°d' weybum' N’W'T" says: “Baby's own em in the decayed matter in the soil; Sheep will consume the immature Tablets are valuable in cases of the water containing the products of and uwmdfan apples with all their diarrhoea" consupation' hiveS' and decomposition and putremction cam content of larvae of predatory inâ€" when teething. I have never used a not but have an unWh-olesome effect sects, and Will keep the base of the medicine that gives such good satis- upOh the person using it. 3112313 013 THE TREES faction." This is the experience of all mothers who have used the Tabâ€" .lllaterial which in its pure condiâ€" lentirely free from the unsightly pro- tion can he used for food undergoes ivided only that the old growth of 1013- if You d0 not ï¬nd the Tablets chemical changes when exposed to :sprouts there be cleared aWay when at your druggiStS 30nd 25 cents t0 the action of certain bacteria and 'the sheep are ï¬rst turned in. Sheep The Dl'- Williams' MOdiCine C0.. pOisons may be produced. and »prune the orchard and have ,BFOCkViUO. Ont“: and a b0x Will be AN EXAMPLE. healthy and fruitful trees so long [sent you by mail post paid. ' . -as you and your blood relatives of Of this change “’hiCh is Capable 0f iany not too remore kinship shall live taking place in vegetable and animal to 'enjoy the fruits of your orchard matter and producing poisons, island your wise attention to it in shown iri pressed beef, which when lseason. exposed to the action of certain bacâ€" Bein ‘ a “d 'ed-inâ€"theâ€"wool†admirâ€" m teria produces a poison. Cheese her of Eheep, Iyliave witnessed much EXPERT SAYS GREA‘L HARM which is made under certain condiâ€" lof their being kept in orchards. IS DONE BY WRONG DIET' tions, where certain kinds of bacterâ€" iYem‘s ago, when I was studying up """' in can grow in it, produces a poison Ion the subject of growing hot~house Condemns the F°°d Given to also. These unwholesome results llambs‘, I drove about six miles to Schoolboys, Soldiers and Sailors. are produced When these beculiar bac- see an expert at the business and his teria come in contact with food ma- flock. I found them in his orchard. tcl‘iali and it iS necessary in order A few weeks previously he had plowâ€" Is the. British nation growing too that g00d health I‘OSUIt. ’60 Prevent ed it and SQWII it in Canada p038 fast? That is a question which is the introduction of both the bacteria and oats, and at this time his sheep being seriouglv discussed just now which are capable of producing poisâ€" were feeding upon them. He used in v‘iew of flu; Statement by a prom. onous products and the poisons hurdles, and fed off in patches, as it mom; medical man at Edinb‘urr‘rh that themselves, into the body. were. The next fall, in November, the youth of mm pountry am" being The germs of many diseases are I Acalled again to observe his method fed at school upth a diet which on- widely distributed by means of waâ€" ,of wintering his sheep. That season couraqu the formation of flesh “I- ter and milk‘ supply. It has been there was very little fruit in all this ther thhh 'htohmt known that the epidemic of typhoid section, owing to a. late frost the DI, Yor]1_th1 s. of Lehdon the fever has resulted from a contamin~ 'prevjous spring, He invited me in- 11'“ (odd; ’ “rt ‘. (31, the Med ' water supply being used for Ho his capacious fruit cellar and we. Imown d X? 0,11? 031:1. 18f an in- washing the milk cans, without boilâ€" pointed out 600 bushels of great red iï¬tclï¬jch‘e ggvcsih: follmw B“ll‘UN8 lllliBiDLY ing. winter apples which he was holding . . . . , , The open Well has also been known [for a better market, and said; "x 1113 CKDI‘GSSIOD 01’ his VIEWS. to become contaminated from the Ebclieve here are more apples than MORE ANIMAL FOOD- gerins brought in the mud adhering taiiy half dozen farms in this town- "I am quite in agreement with the to the boots of the persons who used gship could show this season, and opinion expressed by Dr. Leslie Mac- Tliese germs would {sheep were the cause of it." The inâ€" kcnzie at the meeting of the Par- be deposited on theplatform and be ‘cipient fruit at the time of°the frost ents' National Education Union at washed down by the rain into the seemed to have the vigor and Edinburgh, that the average schoolâ€" well. Sickness which results from ,strength to resist the frost. This boy is very improperly fed, and a the intorduction of germs into the Eman kept 100 ewes to grow hotâ€" vel‘v great deal of harm is done to body, such as typhoid, is a. very ibouse lambs, and from them that thevyouth of this cmmtrv by. \vrong Postly experience to the CommunitY- yeal‘ he 301d 107 lanle at 8 to 10 diet. He has too much" farinaceous the city of Plyâ€" weeks of age at $6 to $11 each. And food and not enough animal food mouth, Pan had an epidemic-5 The he is still at the business. The practice of giving boys beer is a population of the city was 8000. thorou ‘ 1 . . . . - ghly bad one, as at their age “hole W910 0‘ er 1000 cases and 100 they are much better without alcoâ€" dcnws fmm it' holic -t'i ul 1: f n l"nd Thecost to the community was 05- he spores of potato blight are “TIE ‘11 5m 51 0 a 3: I“ 2‘ 1 timatedfls follows: Loss of wages carried through- thc air, and fan on u. usual sc 10,01 I).an s are mare 01’ those Who l'CCOVOI‘C‘d. $30,020; the leaves during the last of July up far too. larggltv 0f bread’ Duaâ€" Cm‘e Of SiCk, $67,300; yearly earnings to August 1 for the late blight. They (hugs! and Jami “’mCh are “Qt the Of those Who died, $18,499; giving soon germinate and enter the tissues f°°ds 0f energy- one bOYiI‘VhO “’11? total cost of $115,619. of the plant. After the leaves comâ€" 1‘eCently brought to me for overâ€"fat- .â€".._â€"- mence to blight, nothing can cure $35: imidel‘ted ‘60 be remove? “($10; .1. ~ -2 them, but a person will be able to 13 SC 00 a once, SO VOW mljm l1 SHLEP IN ORCHARDS' prevent the disease from going down Was the diet proving. Every schoolâ€" 'As a. general rule, when we see orâ€" into his tubers by either pulling or bOY. says Dr. Clement Dukes, a great This, of course, authority, should have a. pound of well POTATO S PR AYING-. and all beyond that checks the growth of the potato, but meat 0. daY. and it sh0111d be time, says Dr. Galen Wilson, we see it is better to have small and sound cooked. With this I agree. many dead limbs and branches upon potatoes than larger ones that "It is not, however, in schools the trees and decay stamped upon are decayed. It is still better to alone that feeding is based on onâ€" ,_... _______ tirer wrong principles. The same mm“ is the case in the army, the navy - a m and nearly all great public instituâ€" tions. Take work-houses, for in- thatthe inmates of a certain workâ€" ‘ ® . ' house had grown so fat that the to 50 years, stance. Not long ago it was stated chairs Were not sufï¬ciently large for them. ‘ SAILOR BADLY FED. Ailmentsoi’theb‘lost Painful Nature Resultâ€"Prompt †g . _ - The food of the sailor, according to the latest. ‘improved’ ration, is Cure Games With the Use of absolutely too ridiculous for words, if“. because it contains over three times as much farinaceous matter as he i _ should be allowed: The result of the From every part of this broad land vtime I was a great sufferer and 'had iffï¬ggotl‘gxgegiiï¬ithlï¬: filer: tive than he ought to be. In a few years, in fact, it is calculated, as I have pointed out in an article in the “Finally, I began using DR Chase.s 'Gcntlonian’s Magazine,’ to make him Kidney-Liver Pills and soon found fat' lazy and gouty! and he. Wm relief. Thus encouraged I continued scarcely be able to waddle about the to use these pills and after having deï¬k . _ taken twelve boxes was again in per- The conths at DartmOOI‘ feet health and vigor. I can sleep have more than doume the - I undisturbed, the pains in the kidneys of foodâ€"that is to say, farinaceous Reid, ervdle, Mus- and back are gone». and I am feeling- foodSâ€"that they should have, with \Vl‘iteSIâ€"â€FOI' nearly well and , strong. I consider Dr. the resun’ that they become Very I was troubled with} Chase's 'j:{idney_Liver Pius a great obese. When I went OVer the prison kidney di$ease and have I‘Bceï¬tly boon to suffering humanity and had recently I found that moat °f them been completely cured by using three I known about them When I Was a were too fat even to walk properly, , Kidney'Livar young man could have escaped sufferâ€" and Obvmumy “0% 5° capable 01 (10'. Pills_ I heme trio‘g a great many mg an the best years of my hm], lng the convict’s ordinary hard work remedies, but never seemed to get D13 cham’s Kidney_L1ver P1115, alB-they Should be. anything to do me muCh 800d until one pill avdose, 25 cents a box, at FATNESS COMMON- ! used these pills." all dealers, or Edinanson, Bates 8; “I have noticed that among the M1. John Gearm, an old resident Company, Toronto. To protect you upper classes in this country over- qf ’I‘horold, Ont., states:â€"â€""For twenâ€" against imitations, the portrait and fatness is becoming more and more ' years I was badly afflicted with isignature of Dr. A. W. Chase, the common. This is in some measure idney ti‘oubles, indigestion and .famous receipt book author, are on due to the fact that the luxurious bladder derangements. eat a. great deal more than thï¬xr 1y to pass Water. I tried different. doctors and used all sorts of cines to no avail. Dr. Chase’s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills. They seem to be well suited to the needs. of many people, who ob- tain no benefit from ordinary kidney inediâ€" Wlien you wait to think of the. hosts of euros they are making it is no wonder they have such an enorm- ous sale. Mrs. CaSWell koka, Ont., also amount During that every box. l ~ - ..-. may... -â€"â€"- dogmaâ€"“Mn... .. Ask 'the properly prevent the blight of the ought to. some even double and treb~ le what they need. ‘ It is also due in part to the abominable dishes which pass as I" country. “So difficult, in fact,-is it to get French cookery properly done that it ought. as a general rule, to be rig~ orously eschewed. I am not referâ€" ring, of course, to great hotels like Claridge's or the Savoy, where .the very best chefs procurable are eniâ€" ployed,,nor to some of the dinners prepared at the homes of the weal- thiest upper classes. but if you go to the middle-class homes, where at- tempts are made by third-rate Eng- lish cooks to reproduce delicate French sauces and garnishings, the result is most ludricrous. “Our reputation as a meat-eating nation accounts no doubt for the moderate average of girth of .tlie British nation, in comparison with the iniddleclass in Continental counâ€" tries, such as Italy, France, Holland and Belbiuni, where a large propor- ition of the diet is farinaceous. and the tendency is for the people to be- come very obese. The Germans are alSO, as a race, very stout, and this seems to he in a great measure due to their drinking such large quanti- ties of .thin beer, which is- :‘ery fatâ€" toning. DULLS TIIE INTELLE CT. “Over-fatness undoubtedly tends. to ' dull the intellect and decrease energy. it Will be found by studying his- tory that very few really great and successful soldiers or thinkers have been fat. I think there is some truth in the assertion of a. military friend of mine that if Napoleon had been thirtyâ€"ï¬ve instead of fortyâ€"Six and not so fat when he fought. Wat- erloo, the result of the battle might have been different. As it was, over- fatness had sapped his energy and crippled the ease of his movements. Wellington, on the other hand, had the advantage of being a. comparaâ€" tively thin man. "If We take the leading statesmen of to-day, Mr. Chamberlain has dc- cidedly a slim figure, and Mr. Bal- four also errs on the right side. Among the Liberals, Mr. Morley, per- haps the most thoughtful of his party, has no superfluous flesh to enâ€" cumber him. “You will very seldom ï¬nd a dis- contented inan overâ€"fat“, because so much of his time is devoted to wor- tying over his grievances, whether real or imaginary. That is What I meant when I said in the Gentle- man’s Magazine that I should like to see a tiventyâ€"stone Anarchist. Idiots. on the other band, who are lacking in intellect, are usually obese and flabby. FAT EASILY REMOVED. “Those who have the misfortune to be over-fat have at least the con- solation that it is a diseaSe easily cured by proper diet and exercise. As it is caused almost invariably by improper food, it can only be dealt with by the patient with proper food. Medicines are useless, and should never be taken for that pur- pose. Tho quack medicines which you see advertised so freely, and such drugs as acetic acid, thyroid tablets, and purgatives of various kinds. if they bring about reduction of weight at all, do so at the ex- pense of health. _ “Of course, it is impossible to lay down a particular diet suitable for all cases of overâ€"fatness. The proper food for one individual is not the proper food for another; in fact, in this case nothing could be more true than the old adage that, ‘What is one man's food is another man’s poispn.’ " STRATEGY OF THE CUCKOO. The Indian fruit-cuckoo, which, like all members' of the cuckoo fam- ily, lays its eggs in the nests of other birds, and thus avoids the trouble of hatching them, is said to exhibit most interesting strategy in dealing with crows", which are its enemies. Whereas the lien. an in- conspicuous spccklcd gray bird, con- ceals herself in the foliage, the cock, remarkable for his brilliant black plumage and crimson eyes, places himself on a porch near a crow's nest, and makes a great noise. The crows immediately rush out to attack him, and he takes to flight with them in pursuit. The hen meanwhile slips into the nest and deposits an egg. Sometimes the crows get back before the egg is laid and then the intruding hen cuckoo. gets a- trouncing. ENGLAND Si OLDFST' STATION. The only railway station in ‘Eng- land that can boast of being really old is that at Bourne, Lincolnshirc, which is an ancient Elizabethan man- sion, formerly in the possession of the Digby family, some members of which Were implicated in the Gun- powder Plot. When the Great Northâ€" ern and Midland Railways- came through this district a memorial was sent from the inlï¬tbitants of Bourne asking that, instead of pulling the old landmark down, it. might be Of course, there are ‘ ~â€"_â€"â€"_â€"_â€"-‘-9 DR. GIUSEPPE Lutiii‘iif rench cookery in this PHYSICIAN To THE POPE PRAISES DRQ WILLIJKMS PIN K PILLS. In Four Cases of Anaemia Their Effects Were so Satisfactory that He Will Go on Using Them. Dr. Lapponi, whose skill preserved the life of the late Pope Leo XIII t0 the great age of 02, and to whose care the health of the present Pope, His Holiness Pins 3., is confided. has written the remarkable letter of which the following is a transla- tion :â€" “I certify that I have tried Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills in four cases of the simple Anaemia of development. After a few weeks of treatment, the result came fully up to my expecta- tions. For that reason I shall not fail in the future to extend the use of this laudable preparation not on- ly in- the treatment of other morbid forms of the category of Anaemia or Chlorosis, but. also- iii cases of Neur- asthenia .and the like." DR. GIUSEPPE LAl’lz’ONI. Dr. Giuseppe Lapponi, Physician to the Pope, who has written a. letter in praise of Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills for ' Pale People. It would be impossible to exagger- ate the importance of this opinion. Dr. Lapponi's high-ofï¬cial positiOn places his professional competence- above question, and it is certain that he did not write as above with- out weighing his words, or without a full sense of the effect his opinion would have. The “simple anaemia of develop- ment†referred to by .Dr. Lapponi is of course that tired, languid condiâ€" tion of young girls whose develop- ment to womanhood is tardy, and whose health, at the period of that development, is so often iinperilled. A girl, bright and merry enough in childhood, will in her teens grow by degrees pale and languid. Frequent headaches, and a sense of uneasiness which she cannot. understand, makes her miserable. Just when it is time for her to leave off being a girl and become .,a womanâ€"a change which comes to different individuals at difâ€" ferent agesâ€"her development lingersâ€"â€" why? Because the has too little blood.‘ That is what Dr. Lapponi means when he speaks, in the scien- tiï¬c language natural to him, of “tho anaemia of development.†Dr. Wilâ€" liams' Pink Pills for Pale People. have the power of making new blood. They cure anaemia just as, food cures hunger. That. is how they help growing girls, who, for want of this new blood, often drift into chronic illâ€"health, or “go into a. declineâ€-â€"which means consumption â€"â€"and die. Dr. Williams' Pills could save them. The value of Dr. Williams’ Pink; Pills as a nerve tonic, referred to‘ by Dr. Lapponi, makes them valuaâ€"| ble to men as well as women. They; act on the nerves through the bloodl and thus cure diseases like St. Vitus! dance, neuralgia, paralysis and locoâ€" motor ataxia... When buying these. pills it is important to see that thei, full name Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills} for Pale People†is printed on the wrapper around each box. Neverl take a, substitute, as it is worse} than a waste of moneyâ€"it is a menâ€", ace to health. If you cannot get the! genuine pills from your dealer write the Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont., and the pills will be sent you post paid at 50 cents a. box or six boxes for $2.50. . ._.___+._. JAPANESE G ODS. It is said that there are no fewer' than eight millions of gods worshipâ€"I poll by the Japanese. Praying is! made very easy. In the streets are tall posts with prayers printed on them and with a. small.wlieel at- tached. Anyone passing by can give the wheel a turn, and that counts. as a prayer. The people in the secâ€", ond largest of the 3,850 islands of which the Empire is compole wor- ship the bear and reverence the sun, moon, ï¬re, wind, and water. Money occasionally makes fool of, converted into a railway station, for a man by helping him to break into: which purpose it answers admirably societv‘ now. Part of the house is used as a I residence by the stationâ€"master. father a bad cold?" He is merely reading War news "Has your "No, indeed. the Russian-Japanese aloud." -â€"sâ€".â€". Some women are busy little bodies and some others are little'- busy- rmin . ~ can. a. SlifiSE’e a: . BATAlilil-l cue side. 15 sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the at: '1 passages, stops drpppin s in the , throat and pcrinanan'z y cures Catarrh and Ma Fever. Blower free. All dealers. or W. Chas. “Farlinlnn Cr, . Tnvanfn hud‘ I "vi